| Tue, Jun 16, 2009 |
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CBSNews.com Relaunches; Still Needs the Traffic Hose
After pruning CBS’s online news efforts two years ago, the company is now trying to build it back up as CNET’s tech and edit/management integration permeates across the company, and as part of that, it has relaunched CBSNews.com tonight.
The new site takes cues from CBS (NYSE: CBS) Evening News’ own design overhaul which rolled out a month ago on TV, and from the previous predominantly white background, has moved to a blended white and grey, with a premium on visuals. It starts with the main rotating visual carousel of stories, which as a feature is now becoming standard on a lot of general news sites. The site has also added lot more original content from CBSNews reports and columnists and content partners (Politico, CBS MoneyWatch, *Washington Post*and WebMD), more robust destinations for each of its news programs, and access to live coverage of breaking news and special events, it says.
It has made Washington Unplugged, a weekly online video series hosted by Bob Schieffer, into a daily segment. Also being added late summer, a new show by comedian Mo Rocca, called “The Tomorrow Show”, as a “fun, interactive discussion about what the future has in store, and the possibilities on the horizon,” as the company describes it. More interestingly, it has added a new site/blog Crimesider as an adjunct to its 48 Hours show. Written by executive producer Susan Zirinsky, the new site is positioned as the one-stop destination for true-crime news. Sean McManus, president of CBS News & Sports described this new site first at our EconAffinity conference last month in NYC. (Video here.)
The site is also launching a new Blackberry app (not live yet), and will launch an iPhone app this summer.
Despite all this, CBSNews.com has a big challenge ahead, as it is the smallest in terms of traffic, compared to other network news sites like CNN.com, MSNBC.con and FoxNews.com. While the company likes to tout its month-over-month unique users growth citing Nielsen NetRatings numbers in its press releases, numbers from Compete, Quantcast and Google Trends show otherwise. CBS has always lacked the big portal hose like CNN and MSNBC had in AOL (NYSE: TWX) and MSN respectively over the years, but the CNET acquisition was supposed to solve some part of that.
So far it hasn’t happened except for the spikes last year because of elections. CBS Interactive’s slate of sites—including the collective of CNET, CBS.com, CBSSports.com, GameSpot, TV.com, Last.fm and others—have now broken into the top 10 global properties online, according to NetRatings. Shouldn’t it start seeing some more traffic growth on the online side? Any more ideas on how CBSNews.com could go up the ranks of news site, besides organic growth?
A short video about the new redesign, from Katie Couric, embedded below:
Watch CBS Videos Online
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paidContent.org
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CBSNews.com Relaunches; Still Needs the Traffic Hose
After pruning CBS’s online news efforts two years ago, the company is now trying to build it back up as CNET’s tech and edit/management integration permeates across the company, and as part of that, it has relaunched CBSNews.com tonight. The new site takes cues from CBS (NYSE: CBS) Evening News’ own design overhaul which rolled out a month ago on TV, and from the previous predominatly white background, has moved to a blended white and grey, with a premium on visuals. It starts with the main rotating visual carousel of stories, which as a feature is now becoming standard on a lot of general news sites. The site has also added lot more original content from CBSNews reports and columnists and content partners )Politico, CBS MoneyWatch, Washington Post (NYSE: WPO) and WebMD), more robust destinations for each of its news programs, and access to live coverage of breaking news and special events, it says.
It has made Washington Unplugged, a weekly online video series hosted by Bob Schieffer, into a daily segment. Also being added late summer, a new show by comedian Mo Rocca, called “The Tomorrow Show”, as a “fun, interactive discussion about what the future has in store, and the possibilities on the horizon,” as the company describes it. More interestingly, it has added a new site/blog Crimesider as an adjunct to its 48 Hours show. Written by executive producer Susan Zirinsky, the new site is positioned as the one-stop destination for true-crime news. Sean McManus, president of CBS News & Sports described this new site first at our EconAffnity conference last month in NYC.
The site is also launching a new Blackberry app (not live yet), and will launch an iPhone app this summer.
Despite all this, CBSNews.com has a big challenge ahead, as it is the smallest in terms of traffic, compared to other network news sites like CNN.com, MSNBC.con and FoxNews.com. While the company likes to tout its month-over-month unique users growth citing Nielsen NetRatings numbers in its press releases, numbers from Compete, Quantcast and Google Trends show otherwise. CBS has always lacked the big portal hose like CNN and MSNBC had in AOL (NYSE: TWX) and MSN respectively over the years, but the CNET acquisition was supposed to solve some part of that. So far it hasn’t happened except for the spikes last year because of elections. CBS Interactive’s slate of sites—including the collective of CNET, CBS.com, CBSSports.com, GameSpot, TV.com, Last.fm and others—have now broken into the top 10 global properties online, according to NetRatings. Shouldn’t it start seeing some more traffic growth on the online side? Any more ideas on how CBSNews.com could go up the ranks of news site, besides organic growth?
A short video about the new redesign, from Katie Couric, embedded below:
Watch CBS Videos Online
-
paidContent.org
|
|
CBSNews.com Relaunches; Still Needs the Traffic Hose
After pruning CBS’s online news efforts two years ago, the company is now trying to build it back up as CNET’s tech and edit/management integration permeates across the company, and as part of that, it has relaunched CBSNews.com tonight. The new site takes cues from CBS (NYSE: CBS) Evening News’ own design overhaul which rolled out a month ago on TV, and from the previous predominatly white background, has moved to a blended white and grey, with a premium on visuals. It starts with the main rotating visual carousel of stories, which as a feature is now becoming standard on a lot of general news sites. The site has also added lot more original content from CBSNews reports and columnists and content partners )Politico, CBS MoneyWatch, Washington Post (NYSE: WPO) and WebMD), more robust destinations for each of its news programs, and access to live coverage of breaking news and special events, it says.
It has made Washington Unplugged, a weekly online video series hosted by Bob Schieffer, into a daily segment. Also being added late summer, a new show by comedian Mo Rocca, called “The Tomorrow Show”, as a “fun, interactive discussion about what the future has in store, and the possibilities on the horizon,” as the company describes it. More interestingly, it has added a new site/blog Crimesider as an adjunct to its 48 Hours show. Written by executive producer Susan Zirinsky, the new site is positioned as the one-stop destination for true-crime news. Sean McManus, president of CBS News & Sports described this new site first at our EconAffnity conference last month in NYC.
The site is also launching a new Blackberry app (not live yet), and will launch an iPhone app this summer.
Despite all this, CBSNews.com has a big challenge ahead, as it is the smallest in terms of traffic, compared to other network news sites like CNN.com, MSNBC.con and FoxNews.com. While the company likes to tout its month-over-month unique users growth citing Nielsen NetRatings numbers in its press releases, numbers from Compete, Quantcast and Google Trends show otherwise. CBS has always lacked the big portal hose like CNN and MSNBC had in AOL (NYSE: TWX) and MSN respectively over the years, but the CNET acquisition was supposed to solve some part of that. So far it hasn’t happened except for the spikes last year because of elections. CBS Interactive’s slate of sites—including the collective of CNET, CBS.com, CBSSports.com, GameSpot, TV.com, Last.fm and others—have now broken into the top 10 global properties online, according to NetRatings. Shouldn’t it start seeing some more traffic growth on the online side? Any more ideas on how CBSNews.com could go up the ranks of news site, besides organic growth?
A short video about the new redesign, from Katie Couric, embedded below:
Watch CBS Videos Online
-
paidContent.org
|
|
CBSNews.com Relaunches; Still Needs the Traffic Hose
After pruning CBS’s online news efforts two years ago, the company is now trying to build it back up as CNET’s tech and edit/management integration permeates across the company, and as part of that, it has relaunched CBSNews.com tonight. The new site takes cues from CBS (NYSE: CBS) Evening News’ own design overhaul which rolled out a month ago on TV, and from the previous predominatly white background, has moved to a blended white and grey, with a premium on visuals. It starts with the main rotating visual carousel of stories, which as a feature is now becoming standard on a lot of general news sites. The site has also added lot more original content from CBSNews reports and columnists and content partners )Politico, CBS MoneyWatch, Washington Post (NYSE: WPO) and WebMD), more robust destinations for each of its news programs, and access to live coverage of breaking news and special events, it says.
It has made Washington Unplugged, a weekly online video series hosted by Bob Schieffer, into a daily segment. Also being added late summer, a new show by comedian Mo Rocca, called “The Tomorrow Show”, as a “fun, interactive discussion about what the future has in store, and the possibilities on the horizon,” as the company describes it. More interestingly, it has added a new site/blog Crimesider as an adjunct to its 48 Hours show. Written by executive producer Susan Zirinsky, the new site is positioned as the one-stop destination for true-crime news. Sean McManus, president of CBS News & Sports described this new site first at our EconAffnity conference last month in NYC.
The site is also launching a new Blackberry app (not live yet), and will launch an iPhone app this summer.
Despite all this, CBSNews.com has a big challenge ahead, as it is the smallest in terms of traffic, compared to other network news sites like CNN.com, MSNBC.con and FoxNews.com. While the company likes to tout its month-over-month unique users growth citing Nielsen NetRatings numbers in its press releases, numbers from Compete, Quantcast and Google Trends show otherwise. CBS has always lacked the big portal hose like CNN and MSNBC had in AOL (NYSE: TWX) and MSN respectively over the years, but the CNET acquisition was supposed to solve some part of that. So far it hasn’t happened except for the spikes last year because of elections. CBS Interactive’s slate of sites—including the collective of CNET, CBS.com, CBSSports.com, GameSpot, TV.com, Last.fm and others—have now broken into the top 10 global properties online, according to NetRatings. Shouldn’t it start seeing some more traffic growth on the online side? Any more ideas on how CBSNews.com could go up the ranks of news site, besides organic growth?
A short video about the new redesign, from Katie Couric, embedded below:
Watch CBS Videos Online
-
paidContent.org
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| Mon, Jun 15, 2009 |
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Updated: HuffPo Changes CEOs: Betsy Morgan Being Replaced By SoftBank’s Eric Hippeau
The Huffington Post, which has achieved great popularity but is still looking for the profit to match, is getting its second CEO in as many years, paidContent has learned. Betsy Morgan, who joined the high-profile media startup in late 2007, is being replaced by Eric Hippeau (pictured, right), a managing partner at investor SoftBank Capital and a member of the HuffPo board. Morgan will be leaving the company, according to a source familiar with the situation; Hippeau, who will become a special partner and advisor to SoftBank, is expected to start later this week. The company will announce the changes later this afternoon. (The official release is out; full text below.)
Hippeau is no newcomer to media; he was chairman and CEO of Ziff-Davis in the ‘90s, involved in growing ZDNet and founding cable channel ZDTV. He is credited by SoftBank with being instrumental in its first investment in Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) in 1995. In addition to the HuffPo and Yahoo boards, he is a director of Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide, Buddy Media, BuzzFeed, Goodmail Systems, PureVideo, ThumbPlay and Associated Content. He is expected to remain on the public boards and on the boards of several of the portfolio companies but will be working full time for HuffPo. He has been intimately involved with the company since SoftBank led the first round.
Morgan went to HuffPo from *CBS*, where she was SVP and GM of CBSNews.com; she was the first CEO by title, succeeding Ken Lerer, the cofounder who headed the business side. A source familiar with the situation credited Morgan with doing a “terrific job” getting the company to this point but said the company, which raised another $25 million from Oak Investments late last year for expansion, needed someone with broader media experience and an advertising and technology background to take the next steps.
—Update: As expected, the official announcement by cofounders Lerer and Arianna Huffington is out. They credit Morgan, who is still a shareholder, with a six-fold increase in audience and the doubling of HuffPo’s advertising revenue. Full release below.
THE HUFFINGTON POST NAMES SOFTBANK MANAGING PARTNER ERIC HIPPEAU NEW CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
New York, NY, June 15, 2009—The Huffington Post (huffingtonpost.com) announced today that Eric Hippeau, managing partner of SoftBank Capital and former CEO of Ziff-Davis, has been named the company’s new chief executive officer. Current CEO Betsy Morgan, who is leaving the company, will be working closely with Eric Hippeau on the transition. The Huffington Post co-founders Arianna Huffington and Kenneth Lerer made the announcement. Over the last year, The Huffington Post has been the fastest growing news site as measured by Nielsen Online and in December raised $25 million from Oak Investment Partners.
Mr. Hippeau has worked closely with The Huffington Post since SoftBank Capital led a Series-A company financing in 2006. Prior to SoftBank Capital, Mr. Hippeau was CEO of Ziff-Davis, when it was the largest media company in the technology sector. Mr. Hippeau led the company’s online initiatives, including the development of ZDNet into an online brand. He was also instrumental in SoftBank’s first investment in Yahoo! in 1995. In addition, Mr. Hippeau was responsible for founding ZDTV, a cable channel dedicated to technology and the Internet, and an early success in integrating television and the Web.
Betsy Morgan, who will also be vacating her seat on the Company Board, joined The Huffington Post as CEO from CBS (NYSE: CBS) News in October 2007. Over the last 18 months, Ms. Morgan has played a pivotal role in expanding the company’s audience, content and business ventures. Since she assumed the role of CEO, The Huffington Post has seen a six-fold increase in its audience and has doubled its advertising revenue. The company has nearly doubled its staff and expanded its senior team to include a Chief Financial Officer, Managing Editor and a SVP of Business Development. Under her leadership, the site has expanded its content verticals from five to ten and raised $25 million from Oak Investment Partners.
Said Arianna Huffington, editor in chief of The Huffington Post, “I’m delighted that Eric is joining the company as CEO. Having worked closely with him for the last three years, I know firsthand what an invaluable asset he has been in our expansion. And now, given his impressive background in the industry and his intimate knowledge of HuffPost, Eric is uniquely able to hit the ground running as the company takes its expansion to the next level. Betsy has been the perfect leader for The Huffington Post during a critical period in the company’s life and helped build our brand tremendously. I have loved working with her.”
Said Kenneth Lerer, chairman of The Huffington Post, “Betsy has done a fantastic job as the CEO of our company. Under her leadership, we have significantly increased our traffic and advertising and have built a lasting brand. We wish her all the best and we will be working with her closely on a smooth transition. Eric promises to bring an unmatched set of experiences in publishing, web businesses, advertising and technology that will allow us to grow our company across the board.”
Said Eric Hippeau, “As an early investor in HuffPost, I recognized the site’s potential to redefine how news and opinion is disseminated in the digital world—thanks to Arianna’s and Kenny’s vision. I am looking forward to being part of the team which will establish The Huffington Post as a major, long-lasting media brand.”
Said Betsy Morgan, “As a shareholder in the company, I look forward to HuffPost’s continued success. The site is now more than blogging and politics; it is a genuine source of the news of the day and it reflects the culture of our times. I have assembled an amazing team that will continue to generate a fantastic product and grow the business. Together we have exceeded many of our goals, moving the company beyond the political cycle of last year to realize broad success every day.”
Mr. Hippeau joined Ziff-Davis in 1989 as Publisher of PC magazine and he became its Chairman and CEO in 1993. In 1995, SoftBank acquired Ziff-Davis, and Mr. Hippeau continued in the role of CEO until 2000, when the company was sold. During his career at Ziff-Davis, Mr. Hippeau recognized early the prospects for the growth of online media. Under his stewardship, ZDNet became one of the earliest examples of a strong online business model evolving from traditional magazine content. He also directed several successful magazines and marketing service launches in the technology and Internet fields.
Mr. Hippeau was President of SoftBank International Ventures, where he established SoftBank’s international private equity funds and expanded them into Europe, Latin America and Asia. He was also SoftBank Capital’s board representative for its direct investments in industry leading companies, such as Yahoo Inc, Geocities and CNET. Mr. Hippeau serves on the Boards of Yahoo, Inc and Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide.
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